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Robert Reuland

Author of Hollowpoint

8+ Works 135 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Rob Reuland is a senior assistant district attorney in the homicide bureau of the Brooklyn D.A.'s office. A graduate of Cambridge University and Vanderbilt Law School, he lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn, with his wife and two children.

Includes the names: Rob Reuland, Rob Reuland

Series

Works by Robert Reuland

Hollowpoint (2001) 97 copies, 1 review
Semiautomatic: A Novel (2004) 15 copies
Brooklyn Supreme: A Novel (2021) 10 copies
The Convict Maiden (2011) 4 copies, 1 review
Nero Brooklyn (2002) 4 copies
Point mort (2006) 3 copies
The Convict Maiden (2011) 1 copy

Associated Works

Hebbes noire : elf smaakmakers voor de zomer — Contributor — 8 copies

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Common Knowledge

Gender
male

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
This is a tale about the brutal life of a young convict woman, Julia Hannaway, in 1820s’ Australia. The historical background has been very well researched: I’ve lived in Sydney for many years and it’s an odd feeling to see familiar suburban and country centres, Cabramatta, Parramatta, the Blue Mountains and Bathurst depicted as ghastly wildernesses. I suppose nobody now knows what New South Wales actually felt like then, but this novel creates a convincing, and gloomy, milieu. The show more author also succeeded in making me care about Julia Hannaway, to the extent that every time she made one of her several disastrous decisions, I found myself thinking; don’t do it you fool! He depicts compellingly her transformation from an educated, respectable English county girl into a traumatised survival machine, driven to abandon her former manners, and her religious faith, but finally achieving a life. The author is a criminal lawyer from Brooklyn, New York City, whose other works are modern day crime novels.
Why does his authorship of The Convict Maiden surprise me? The United States was founded by people fleeing oppression to reach freedom. But Australia began as a prison and was effectively a police state, with added gangsters (just google “Rum Corps”). Is this what makes some Americans curious about Australia, or perhaps for this author, its legal system? I fully recommend The Convict Maiden.
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I just couldn't get into this book. I tried...for five chapters. Then I gave up. A very dark read with at least the first five chapters spent mostly dwelling on the death of the main character's daughter in a car accident.

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Statistics

Works
8
Also by
1
Members
135
Popularity
#150,830
Rating
3.1
Reviews
2
ISBNs
33
Languages
5

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